Emmerdale’s Graham Foster made a surprise return to the Dales in January, but what do fans know about the man behind the character, actor Andrew Scarborough?
Emmerdale legend Graham Foster has lost no time in getting back to his roots in the village following his jaw-dropping return in January.
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As devoted fans will recall, the much-loved character, portrayed by Andrew Scarborough, was believed to have perished in 2020, before sensationally reappearing during the soap’s crossover with Coronation Street.
Joe Tate (Ned Porteous) was left stunned to find his father figure alive and well, with the pair now residing together at Home Farm. Graham has also attempted to reignite his romance with Rhona Goskirk (Zoe Henry) and has embarked on a fling with Kim Tate (Claire King).
In a compelling twist, viewers are currently witnessing a gentler side to Graham as he takes troubled teenager Kyle Winchester (Huey Quinn) under his wing, following his father Cain’s (Jeff Hordley) battle with prostate cancer, reports the Express.
Reflecting on his comeback, Andrew Scarborough spoke candidly about the surprise of his ITV soap return: “I never expected it at all. Although saying that, I did think that Graham always had a possibility of coming back.”
Speaking about keeping his return under wraps from his nearest and dearest, Andrew, 52, said: “Oh yes, it’s been a big secret, and I kept it mostly quiet from my family, which was tricky.”
He added over who he told: “Oh yes, just a limited few, certainly it is on one hand, in fact I had some cousins who contacted me after it was shown, saying you sod.”
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Among Andrew’s family members is his sister, Victoria Scarborough, who is equally a well-established actress in her own right.
Who is Andrew Scarborough’s famous sister?
Victoria, 59, is widely recognised for her portrayal of Ruth Bannerman in The Grand in 1998, Betty MacFell in The Cinder Path in 1994, and Claire Monceau in Charlotte Gray in 2001.
The talented actress has also featured in an extensive catalogue of television programmes, including The Royal, Birds of a Feather, Holby City, Silent Witness, Where the Heart Is, and Heartbeat.
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It appears Victoria has since ventured into writing and directing, with the short films Hysteria (2022) and Speed Date (2019).
WASHINGTON (AP) — First lady Melania Trump and Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent on Thursday announced the launch of Fostering the Future Accounts, a spinoff of the Trump Accounts investment funds meant to give $1,000 to every newborn whose parent opens one.
Building on her work helping foster children, Trump said the new federal guidance will give child welfare agencies the ability to act as a guardian for children in foster care for the purposes of opening an account.
The first lady, speaking at a news conference at the Treasury Department, said the move “gives foster children the same chance at asset ownership and long-term wealth as every other child.”
The accounts will be open for contributions on July 4. To qualify for an account, a child must also be a U.S. citizen born between Jan. 1, 2025, and Dec. 31, 2028.
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The White House Council of Economic Advisers estimates that a Trump Account balance for a baby born in 2026 will be $5,800 by age 18 and $18,100 by age 28 if no other contributions are made.
The first lady said 23 governors, all Republicans, have pledged to allow state agencies to begin the process of enrolling children in the program. “I urge every governor and business leader to help fund these accounts,” she said.
There are roughly 330,000 children in the U.S. foster care system, according to the National Council for Adoption. One in 5 of them is at risk of homelessness after aging out of foster care, and only half gain employment by the time they are 24, the National Foster Youth Institute says.
“Those outcomes are unsettling, but we refuse to accept them as inevitable,” Bessent told the news conference. “We are affirming that the American dream belongs to every child.”
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A provision of President Donald Trump’s tax and spending legislation that he signed into law last summer created Trump Accounts. Under them, the Treasury Department gives $1,000 to babies so long as their parents open an account. That money is then invested in the stock market by private firms, and the children can access the money when they turn 18.
Employers and billionaires across the country have pledged to make matching Trump Account contributions for employee benefits. Among them are Michael and Susan Dell, who announced a $6.25 billion donation, and hedge fund founder Ray Dalio and his wife, Barbara, who pledged $75 million for kids under 10 in Connecticut, where the Dalios live.
Initially expected at Bishop Auckland Football Club around 7.30pm, it wasn’t until more than four hours later, just after 11.35pm, that Scott finished a 111-mile cycle from Manchester in the cold rain.
Jill Scott arrives in Bishop Auckland on her ‘Coming Home’ Comic Relief challenge. (Image: SARAH CALDECOTT)
Jill Scott arrives in Bishop Auckland on her ‘Coming Home’ Comic Relief challenge. (Image: SARAH CALDECOTT)
The former England and Manchester City midfielder is running and cycling from Wembley Stadium on her five-day ‘Coming Home’ challenge, set to finish at the Stadium of Light tonight (Friday, June 12).
Jill Scott arrives in Bishop Auckland on her ‘Coming Home’ Comic Relief challenge. (Image: SARAH CALDECOTT)
Jill Scott arrives in Bishop Auckland on her ‘Coming Home’ Comic Relief challenge. (Image: SARAH CALDECOTT)
And almost 15-and-a-half hours later, after battling the peaks of the Yorkshire Dales in adverse conditions, she was cheered across the line in Bishop Auckland by crowds with England flags and ‘Go Jill’ signs.
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She was still able to muster a smile as she posed with fans after climbing off the saddle, despite facing a 28-mile run on the final leg in just a few hours, starting around 8am.
Jill Scott arrives in Bishop Auckland on her ‘Coming Home’ Comic Relief challenge. (Image: SARAH CALDECOTT)
The 39-year-old said: “There have been so many people beeping their horns, coming out to spur us on, and it really does help.
“I’m not going to lie – this morning I literally couldn’t get out of bed, my legs hurt that much.
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“Having that support means everything, especially when you’re on the bike in weather like this. I can’t quite believe it’s June.
“Everyone’s been so lovely, but the 38-mile run yesterday (Wednesday, June 10) – it killed us (sic).”
A choir turned out to sing Jill through Leyburn and as she approached the finish line in Bishop Auckland farmers turned out in their tractors to spur her on.
Her final leg will take her through Bishop Auckland, Spennymoor, up through Durham and into Sunderland where she is expected to cross the line at the Stadium of Light around 4.30pm.
Rail replacement services have been deployed between Stafford and Rugby until approximately 21:00.
Customers can also use their tickets on Avanti West Coast services between Crewew and London Euston via Birmingham New Street at no extra cost.
Passengers travelling North towards Crewe from Rugby are advised to travel via Birmingham New Street on either London Northwestern or Avanti West Coast services.
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Northbound passengers for stations between Rugby and Stafford, are advised to use rail replacement buses from Rugby.
Passengers travelling south towards Rugby and the capitol, are advised to travel via Birmingham New Street on either London Northwestern Railway or Avanti West Coast services.
Southbound passengers for stations between Stafford and Rugby are advised to use rail replacement buses from Stafford.
WASHINGTON (AP) — El Nino, Nature’s chaotic climate agent, has formed in a warmed-up Pacific Ocean and is expected to grow to historic strength, meteorologists announced Thursday.
Experts said the El Nino, a natural warming cycle, should further heat a globe already warming from fossil fuel pollution and will likely turbocharge extreme weather across the planet. Meteorologists forecast it will rival — or exceed — a record El Nino that began in 1997 and helped trigger billions of dollars in damage from heat waves, floods, droughts, tornadoes and wildfires.
The U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration officially confirmed the existence of the El Nino, which is a warming of the Pacific near the equator that affects weather patterns across the globe. NOAA’s announcement said there’s a 63% chance that the El Nino will get so intense this late fall and early winter that it “would rank among the largest El Nino events in the historical record going back to 1950.”
The warm, deep waters of an El Nino affect weather patterns by bringing “a lot of extra heat to the surface, fueling a lot of extreme events for a lot of places around the world,” said Clark University climate scientist Abby Frazier.
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She said, especially in the Pacific, “it can get dire very quickly.”
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres described El Nino as an “urgent climate warning.”
“El Nino conditions will pour fuel on the fire of a warming world,” Guterres said in a video message.
El Nino’s impacts spawn winners and losers
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A person uses a fan during a heat advisory in the Brooklyn borough of New York, May 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Adam Gray, File)
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A person uses a fan during a heat advisory in the Brooklyn borough of New York, May 19, 2026. (AP Photo/Adam Gray, File)
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The weather pattern’s effects vary by region. El Nino often dampens — but doesn’t eliminate — Atlantic hurricane season activity, but increases it in the Pacific. So while the U.S. East and Gulf coasts may get a break, Hawaii and other islands are more in danger, Frazier said.
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The drought-stricken Middle East could benefit, climate scientists said. Other places are looking at more danger. Parts of western South America — where the first El Ninos were noticed decades ago — often get heavy rain and floods, along with an extra warm summer. India faces more intense heat waves, while drought, wildfires and heat threaten Australia.
Northeastern Africa is likely going to get weather whiplash from intense drought to dangerously heavy rains, said Columbia University climate scientist and El Nino expert Muhammad Azhar Ehsan.
In the U.S., El Ninos can cause more intense storms with heavier rainfall in the South, but they also tend to generally benefit the U.S. agriculture industry, said Jon Gottschalck, operational branch chief at NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.
Michael Ferrari, meteorologist and head of research at the investment research firm Moby, said conditions for grains and seed, especially soybeans, look favorable in 18 major growing states, but are more mixed when it comes to dairy and cattle.
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The northern Rockies and Southwest — where there’s an “off the charts” snow drought — could get some strong summer rains, Gottschalck said. The biggest effect in the U.S. is often in the winter, when the south can get wetter and the Pacific Northwest warmer and drier.
But overall, temperatures raised by the weather pattern can dampen American economic growth, said Stanford climate economist Marshall Burke. Several climate scientists forecast that 2027 will be the hottest year on record because of lagging effects of this El Nino, which is expected to peak in the fall or winter.
“We have pretty clear evidence that the U.S. economy grows more slowly when temps are above normal,” Burke said.
Strong early signs
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Drought-stressed wheat plants stand adjacent to parched ground in a field near Macksville, Kan., May 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)
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Drought-stressed wheat plants stand adjacent to parched ground in a field near Macksville, Kan., May 16, 2026. (AP Photo/Charlie Riedel, File)
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The weather extremes caused by an El Nino also depend on when it develops.
Usually El Ninos form in the summer, peak in the late fall or early winter, and peter out the next spring, scientists said.
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However, Ehsan’s team forecasts that this El Nino will peak a month or two earlier based on strong early signs from recent weeks. Princeton University climate scientist Gabriel Vecchi said large El Ninos like these also tend to last longer.
The early indications — including warmer water pushing toward the surface of the Pacific — have been so strong and noticeable that forecasters have all been predicting the same ultra strong El Nino, Vecchi said, adding that El Nino forecasts often are all over the place at this time of year.
Scientists predict stronger El Ninos as the world warms from the burning of coal, oil and gas, Frazier and others said. But she said it is too early to say if this El Nino is part of that.
Even before it officially formed, this El Nino has gotten nicknames ranging from “super” to “Godzilla.”
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“Instead of scared, we can ask people to be prepared,” Columbia’s Ehsan said
___
The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.
Pastry lovers will be hoping Scotland win their first match as there is a tasty prize in store.
With Scots up and down the country backing the Tartan Army ahead of our World Cup campaign starting this week, a beloved Scottish bakery has taken their loyalty to the football team even further with a very tasty announcement.
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While thousands of football fans have flocked to America to take in the World Cup atmosphere, many Scots still on home soil are gearing up for a very long weekend as Scotland’s first game is set to take place in the wee hours of Sunday morning (June 14).
Up against Haiti, Scots will be joining watch parties or heading to their local late night pub to watch kick-off at 2am. Bringing everyone together to see Scotland’s first World Cup group match in the past three decades, there is sure to be a few sore heads going into the extra bank holiday.
However, if Scotland are able to clinch a win in their first match, Scottish bakery Bayne’s has made a bold claim. The bakery states that if Scotland secures a win in any of their upcoming Group C matches, Bayne’s will give away 7,000 of its famous sausage rolls away for free in its stores the following morning.
If Scotland celebrate a victory this weekend, the family-run bakery is ready to hand out its most popular product as a reward to its loyal customers and football fans on Monday, June 15.
Bayne’s has over 70 shops across the country, including stores in Stirling, Kirkcaldy, Edinburgh, Dundee, Glasgow, and Falkirk. However, pastry and football fans alike will need to get to stores early doors if the Tartan Army win their first match.
This is because Bayne’s is running the freebie on a first come, first served basis. With the free sausage rolls being distributed evenly across all the shops, this service will begin from the moment the shop doors open the morning after a win.
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However, when they are gone, they are gone. So if you are wanting a savory treat to help cure your hangover or just love a flaky sausage roll, Scots will want to be up early as most shops open at around 6am.
Cheering on the Scottish football team, Bayne’s joint managing director John Bayne said: “As a proud Scottish family business, we wanted to find a meaningful way to stand behind the national team during this tournament.”
He added: “This initiative is our way of bringing local communities together to celebrate these historic games.
“Our retail and bakery teams across all 70 plus shops are fully prepared for the surge in demand, and we look forward to rewarding our customers the morning after a Scottish victory.”
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To claim a free celebratory sausage roll, all customers need to do is visit their local Bayne’s shop on the morning following a confirmed Scotland tournament win, while stocks last.
With the giveaway also linked to Scotland’s other upcoming Group C matches, pastry fans will be able to head to their local Bayne the following morning for a free treat if Scotland confirms a win.
On June 19 Scotland will play against Morocco, while on June 24 the Tartan Army will be playing off against Brazil.
Sharing the giveaway on social media, Bayne’s added: “Our bakery and retail teams are fully prepared for the surge in demand. Come on Scotland, let’s give us all something to celebrate!”
In his resignation letter to the Prime Minister, former Royal Marines commando Mr Carns wrote: “I have sat in the rooms, seen the assessments, and spoken to the commanders who will be asked to do more with less, and I cannot in good conscience stand at the dispatch box and defend a level of investment I know to be inadequate to the task.
On Thursday evening, police said a girl, 14, had also been charged with two counts of possessing a bladed article on school premises.
She will appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in London on Friday.
Two pupils, both aged 14, and a male member of staff, 27, were injured in the incident at the Co–op Academy on Plant Hill Road, Blackley, on Tuesday morning, according to Greater Manchester Police.
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Police said the investigation had been passed to counter-terrorism officers due to circumstances around the incident but that at this time it has not been declared a terrorist incident.
Detective Chief Superintendent Jonathan Chadwick, head of Counter Terrorism Policing North West, said: “These are extremely serious charges against a young girl and, working closely with Greater Manchester Police, we continue to support the victims and their families and offer support to the wider school community, who have been deeply affected by what happened.
“Although charges have now been secured, our investigation is still ongoing, and we continue to work with local policing colleagues in the Blackley area.”
All three who were injured have been released from hospital and suffered no serious injuries, police previously said.
It might give you a hint as to what’s happened – if there has been a seven-goal thriller, for example – but we won’t be giving you the winner or the result.
ATMORE, Ala. (AP) — Alabama is waging a last-minute legal fight to execute a man with nitrogen gas Thursday night, asking the U.S. Supreme Court to set aside a judge’s finding that the method violates the Constitution’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment.
Jeffery Lee, 49, is scheduled to be executed at 6 p.m. However a federal judge ruled Tuesday that nitrogen executions are unconstitutional and blocked the state from using the method to put Lee to death. The state filed an appeal Thursday asking the Supreme Court to set aside the ruling and allow the execution.
“If that ruling stands, it would be unprecedented in American history. Not only does it portend the first-ever permanent ban on a legislatively enacted method, but it would expand the concept of cruelty well beyond the bounds of the Eighth Amendment,” lawyers with the Alabama Attorney General’s Office wrote. The Supreme Court has never ruled that a state’s execution method violates the Constitution.
Lee’s lawyers asked the high court to keep the execution on hold, saying in a response that Alabama is asking it to intervene at the eleventh hour “to allow an execution that has been found unconstitutional to proceed.”
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Prison officials said Lee did not request a final meal Thursday but had potato chips, Skittles, water and a Sprite in the hours ahead of his possible execution.
His case has put a spotlight on the nitrogen method and the sharp disagreements over its use.
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AP AUDIO: Alabama asks US Supreme Court to allow Thursday’s blocked nitrogen gas execution
The state of Alabama is appealing a ruling on nitrogen gas execution. AP correspondent Mike Hempen reports.
The execution method involves strapping a respirator to the person’s face and replacing breathable air with pure nitrogen gas, causing death from a lack of oxygen. Nitrogen has been used in eight executions in the United States — seven in Alabama and one in Louisiana. Lee was scheduled to be the ninth person put the death by nitrogen.
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U.S. District Judge Emily Marks ruled Tuesday, after an appeals court reversed her initial finding that the method was constitutional, that Lee had shown by a “preponderance of the evidence that the protocol constitutes cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment.”
The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, in a 2-1 decision Wednesday night, rejected Alabama’s request to stay the ruling. The court earlier said the three minutes that it could take for an inmate to lose awareness is an “intolerable” time frame, “given the suffering that would likely take place under Alabama’s nitrogen hypoxia protocol.”
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During the previous Alabama nitrogen executions, the inmates shook, pulled at the restraints and exhibited labored breathing. During the state’s last execution by nitrogen gas, 30 minutes elapsed between Anthony Boyd exhibiting signs of being impacted by the gas and state officials closing the curtain to the viewing room to signal the execution was complete.
The state has maintained that the method is constitutional and causes no more suffering than other execution methods.
A jury convicted Lee of two counts of capital murder for killing Jimmy Ellis and Elaine Thompson while robbing a pawnshop on Dec. 12, 1998. Prosecutors said Lee entered Jimmy’s Pawnshop with a sawed-off shotgun and shot Ellis, the owner of the store, and Thompson, a store employee.
A jury voted 7-5 that Lee should receive a sentence of life imprisonment. However, a judge overrode that recommendation and sentenced Lee to death. Alabama in 2017 ended the practice of judicial override and no longer allows a judge to disregard a jury’s sentencing decision in death penalty cases.
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Bestselling author John Grisham called on Gov. Kay Ivey to honor the jury’s decision and commute Lee’s sentence to life without parole.
“The practice of a judge overriding a jury was declared unconstitutional and so indefensible that Alabama itself abolished it in 2017,” Grisham said in a statement. “Jeffery Lee’s jury made its decision, the Alabama Legislature later agreed that juries, not judges, should decide life or death sentences.”
Marks did not block the state from using its other authorized execution methods, lethal injection and the electric chair. However, it is unclear if the state could swiftly change the method.
President Donald Trump unexpectedly summoned reporters to the Oval Office to watch him sign a proclamation rolling back longstanding environmental regulations to permit more aggressive fishing in American waters, but before taking press questions he had one of his own to be answered.
“So, tell me, how do they define that? Because in most industries, like you have policemen, policemen, you call them fishermen and fisherwomen. I haven’t heard of that one before we, how are the women? Do they want to be designated as fisherwomen? Does anybody want to answer that question?”
One of the fishing industry representatives arrayed behind him chimed in to reply that one could use either term — or the gender-neutral term “fisher” if one wants to be “politically correct.”
The president interjected with another question, asking whether the term “fisher people” would work before dismissing the entire topic as “crazy.”
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At that point, another attendee spoke up to cite Google results which he claimed had indicated that most women involved in the fishing industry prefer the term “fisherman” because “they feel like they’re strong individuals, and they can do the work of a man.”
Trump later returned to the subject of the regulatory rollback proclamation by grousing about how the “Obama-Biden administration’s radical environmentalists” had “drastically restricted access for fishermen and coastal communities.”
“What a bunch of dopes. Those decisions close off vast resources, and really, the richest fishing grounds, they say, anywhere in the world destroyed livelihoods and made the United States more dependent on foreign products,” he said.
He continued riffing about the supposed unfairness of the regulations and suggested that both Canada and Japan — the latter of which is nowhere near the Atlantic coast of the U.S. — were unfairly being permitted to fish off the coast of Maine.
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“You weren’t allowed to fish, but Canada was, Japan was. They all came in fish, but our people weren’t allowed to fish there. That was put in by Barack Hussein Obama. Have you heard of him? Barack Hussein Obama and Sleepy Joe Biden, and it’s a shame,” he said.
The proclamation that was the impetus for Thursday’s Oval Office ceremony will restore commercial fishing access to approximately half a million square miles in the Pacific Ocean by rolling back protections for three of what were declared national marine monuments — the Papahānaumokuākea Marine National Monument near Hawaii, the Islands Unit of the Mariana Trench Marine National Monument located east of the Philippines, and the Rose Atoll Marine National Monument in American Samoa.
Trump suggested the monument protections, which were established by the previous administration, had been wholly ruinous for the wealthy commercial fishermen and fishing executives he’d assembled behind him.
He asked them: “When they destroyed your whole life and your family and your business, and everything else, did you ever think you would have somebody who would come along and save it?”
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The president’s latest action follows a similar proclamation last April, which restored fishing access to 400,000 square miles of the Pacific Ocean that had been covered by the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument.
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